Menyentuh Hati! Kakek Pemulung Sampah Ini "Memberiku Uang" Agar Aku Bisa Beli Es Krim. Tapi Keesokan Harinya Ia Malah Masuk Penjara Karena "Hal Ini"!
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– Sudah menjadi takdir hidup kalau kebaikan akan di balas dengan kebaikan, dan
kejahatan suatu saat juga akan mendapatkan balasan atas segala tindakan yang
dilakukan. Salah satu contohnya yakni seperti kisah pilu kakek satu ini nih
guys How Much Data Does Streaming Music Use.
Dunia percaya bahwa selama kita memberi kita akan diberi.
Selama kita baik kepada orang, yang di Atas akan melihat dan membalas kebaikan
kita lewat orang-orang di sekeliling kita.
Kali ini ada sebuah video pendek yang menceritakan tentang
seorang kakek yang berkerja sebagai tukang sampah keliling.
Pada saat keliling jalanan, ia melihat sebuah bocah perempuan
yang lapar dan ingin membeli es krim tapi tidak punya uang. Lalu sang kakek
dengan tulus mengulurkan tangannya dan memberi bocah itu uang. Akhirnya sang
bocah merasa happy bisa membeli es krim.
Keesokan harinya saat sang kakek kembali bekerja, dan tak
disangka ada sebuah motor yang melintas dengan kencang menabrak sang kakek.
Sontak badan kakek terpental dan kaki palsu kakek rentak hancur.
Ternyata pengendara motor itu adalah seorang maling yang
baru saja mencuri tas mahal dari seorang wanita kaya.
Karena merasa sang kakek menghalangi langkah para maling
untuk kabur, si maling sengaja menaruh tas hasil copetan di dada sang kakek,
agar dikira sang kakek yang mencuri tas itu.
Setelah menaruh tas hasil curian, sang maling pun kabur dan
dalam sekejab semua warga langsung mengelilingi sang kakek. Mereka menuduh
kakeklah malingnya dan polisi pun datang untuk menangkap kakek.
Lalu sang kakek dijadikan terdakwa oleh polisi. Sang kakek
hanya bisa meratapi nasib maling di dalam kurungan penjara.
Namun di balik semua kejadian malang itu, sang bocah
perempuan yang pernah diberikan uang oleh kakek melihat kejadian yang
sebenarnya. Karena saat bocah mau memanggil kakek untuk mengucapkan
terimakasih, tiba-tiba sang kakek tertabrak oleh maling.
Karena sang bocah perempuan yang pernah ditolong kakek
merasa kakek tidak bersalah. Akhirnya dengan sisa uang kembalian dari beli es
krim kemarin ia pakai untuk menelepon kantor polisi dan menjelaskan semua.
Singkat cerita kakek dibebaskan dan kakek mendapat kaki
palsu baru.
Dari kisah ini mengajarkan kepada kita bahwa selama kita
berbuat baik, walaupun ada beberapa orang yang mencobai untuk menjerumuskan
kita, percayalah Tuhan akan pakai orang-orang di sekelilingmu untuk membantumu
keluar dari masalah.
So, tetaplah berbuat baik dan menebarkan energi positif
kepada orang di sekelilingmu How Much Data Does Streaming Music Use
Yuk simak videonya di bawah ini:
We take a look at the data usage for the major music streaming services in Australia.
Unlike most major video streaming services, music streaming services often don’t make the exact data requirements for audio playback easily available to browse.
This is quite possibly a necessary practice, due to a mix of using different codecs and various audio bitrates, where larger numbers can sometimes erroneously be associated with better quality.
Thankfully, music streaming providers are more willing to talk about the audio bitrates, which means, with a bit of maths, we can determine a rough idea of data usage in practical scenarios for the major services in Australia.
Apple Music
Image courtesy: Apple.
Tracks downloaded from the iTunes Store and Apple Music are both offered in 256kbps bitrate, using the Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) codec.
This means that an hour of 256kbps music streaming of Apple Music would use up approximately 115MB.
To use up one gigabyte of data, you’d have to listen to approximately 8.5 hours of Apple Music.
There’s an option for lower bitrate playback on mobile devices, but these lower bitrates have not been disclosed.
Google Play Music
Google Play Music image courtesy of the Google Play store.
Playback options for Google Play Music are separated into three categories: Low, Normal, and High.
The bitrate associated with these categories may vary based on available bandwidth but, in basic terms, ‘Low’ ranges from 96kbps to 128kbps, ‘Normal’ extends up to 256kbps, and ‘High’ reaches up to 320kbps.
Extending these numbers out, an hour of music streaming on Low quality could use between 43MB and 58MB.
The ‘Normal’ quality setting on Google Play Music is the same as Apple Music in terms of data usage, and weighs in at roughly 115MB per hour, if you take the given bitrate as a base.
High quality settings on Google Play Music use approximately 144MB of data per hour.
To listen to one gigabyte of streamed music on Google Play Music, then, you’d have to listen to roughly 17 to 23 hours on Low, around 8.5 hours on Normal, and just shy of approximately seven hours on High.
Also, by signing up to YouTube Red, you automatically get a Google Play Music subscription thrown in.
YouTube Red
With a YouTube Red subscription, users also have access to YouTube Music.
YouTube Music offers three media-quality settings: ‘Audio only’, ‘Medium – 360p’, and ‘HD – 720p’.
While YouTube isn’t forthcoming with the exact bitrates that are used, online research suggests that Medium audio plays at either 64kbps (mono), 128kbps (stereo), or 196kbps (5.1 audio).
This means that Medium-quality audio-only music on YouTube Red would use up around 29MB per hour for mono, roughly 58MB per hour for stereo, and approximately 88MB per hour for 5.1 playback.
One gigabyte of data on YouTube Red’s Medium-quality audio-only setting would be used up in around 34.5 hours (mono), about 17 hours (stereo), and roughly 11 hours (5.1), respectively.
HD music streams at either 128kbps (mono), 384kbps (stereo), or 512kbps (5.1 audio).
This means that HD-quality audio-only music on YouTube Red would use roughly 58MB per hour for mono, approximately 173MB per hour for stereo, and about 230MB per hour for 5.1 playback.
One gigabyte of data on YouTube Red’s HD-quality audio-only setting would be used up in approximately 17 hours (mono), close to six hours (stereo), and just over four hours (5.1), respectively.
Spotify
Spotify image courtesy of the Google Play store.
Depending on the device you’re streaming Spotify music to, and your type of account, bitrate quality is offered from as low as 96kbps up to 320kbps.
Spotify uses Normal, High, and Extreme to separate bitrate quality, with Normal meaning 96kbps, High equating to 160kbps, and Extreme translating to 320kbps.
It’s worth noting that the Spotify web player and Chromecast app support 128kbps for “standard quality” music streaming, and up to 256kbps for Premium users.
Here’s the breakdown of megabytes (MB) per hour of streaming music on Spotify, if you take Spotify’s bitrates as a starting point:
96kbps = 43MB
128kbps = 58MB
160kbps = 72MB
256kbps = 115MB
320kbps = 144MB
In order to use one gigabyte of data on Spotify, you’d have to listen to 23 hours on Normal, or 17 hours on the “standard quality” setting on the web player or via the Chromecast app.
High would take around 14 hours to use a gigabyte of data, and just short of seven hours on Extreme.
Premium users on Spotify or the Chromecast app could listen to around 8.5 hours before using one gigabyte of data.
Tidal
Tidal image courtesy of the Google Play store.
The point of difference for Tidal’s music streaming service is the upper-end streaming option that’s targeted at audiophiles.
Tidal offers two bitrates associated with two different packages: 320kbps for its Premium package, and 1,411kbps for HiFi.
This means that the Premium Tidal service could use up to 144MB per hour.
This service could use up one gigabyte of data in just under seven hours.
Tidal’s HiFi service uses approximately 635MB per hour of streamed music, and could go through one gigabyte of data in an hour and a half.
iHeartRadio
iHeart Radio image courtesy of the Google Play store.
The iHeartRadio music streaming service only offers a single bitrate option: 128kbps.
This means iHeartRadio would use approximately 58MB per hour, and it could take just over 17 hours of playback to use up one gigabyte of data.
SoundCloud
SoundCloud image courtesy of the Google Play store.
When users and artists upload music to SoundCloud, it’s automatically converted to 128kbps MP3 format, regardless of the codec or compression of the original file.
Like iHeartRadio, this means that SoundCloud uses roughly 58MB per hour, and it would take around 17 hours of streaming music to use up one gigabyte of data.
Deezer
Deezer image courtesy of the Google Play store.
Though its local offices have been closed, you can still access the Deezer music streaming service in Australia.
Deezer offers four quality presets for music playback.
‘Compact’ offers 128kbps music playback, which uses roughly 58MB an hour.
‘Balanced’ automatically boosts Wi-Fi playback to 320kbps, which is the same bitrate as ‘Enhanced’.
These two quality presets use around 144MB per hour of streamed music.
‘Custom’ drops audio playback to 64kbps, and uses around 29MB per hour of music playback.
To use one gigabyte of data on Deezer, it would take roughly more than 34 hours of streaming on ‘Custom’, approximately 17 hours on ‘Compact’, and close to seven hours on ‘Balanced’ and ‘Enhanced’.
How much monthly data do I need?
In terms of streaming music in your home, the monthly data requirement will vary depending on which services you use and how frequently you stream music.
Even at the highest possible streaming quality, it’ll take roughly 8.5 hours of Apple Music streaming to use one gigabyte of data, and around seven hours apiece for Spotify and Google Play Music.
That’s a lot of tunes for a gigabyte of data.
Pushed to the highest quality, our YouTube Red estimates suggest only four hours per gigabyte of streamed audio, and with Tidal you’ll definitely want to consider the 1.5-hours-per-gigabyte for 1411kbps streaming.
On the other end of the spectrum, fixed-bitrate music streaming services like SoundCloud and iHeartRadio offer up to around 17 hours of playback per gigabyte of data.
Where you fall on the audio-quality scale – either happy with radio-quality bitrate or a fidelity-loving audiophile – will determine your household data needs for streaming music.
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